Saturday, April 18, 2020
Polish Art Essays - Central Europe, Eastern Europe, Poland
  Polish Art  On the 26th of January I decided to visit for the first time the San Diego    Museum of Arts. When I came upon the museum which from a view was an astonishing  piece of architectural exquisiteness. This extravagant building was amazingly  distinguishable from all the other ill-rooted, stucco wall structures  surroundings. I arrived at the admission desk and upon purchasing my 6$ ticket  the young lady told me that there is an exhibition on Art in Poland. I was still  thinking that the museum would display some works from Italy, France, Spain, and  other well-known European art. Puzzled I asked her about what was troubling me  and she responded by saying "Sir, we only have items related to this specific  exhibition for the next months". My expectation was that this museum would  have visual arts that I had been familiarized during my "European    Humanities" class. But since their was only a couple of days until the due  date for this report and Poland was part of European art I decided to take a  risk and discover the unknown. The exhibition features splendid and often exotic  objects from a time when Poland, which was united in a Republic with Lithuania,  was the largest nation in Europe. Located on Europe's eastern frontier, Poland  was viewed by its western allies as the Bulwark of Christendom, Defender of the    Faith against the Moslem Ottoman Empire that lay to the east. Because Poland was  situated at a crossroads of international trade, Polish culture became a  synthesis of western and eastern influences.. Roman and Byzantine Christianity,    Protestantism, Islam, Judaism, and variations in-between, met with the western    Renaissance and Baroque; and absorbed prominent influences from Turkish, Arabic  and Oriental cultures.. The Baroque is all the more evident when seen from a  society which knew neither the Middle Ages nor a subsequent Renaissance.    Including fine examples of Baroque art and splendid objects from a land greatly  influenced by the developing eastern and western cultures. "Land of The    Winged Horsemen/ Art in Poland 1572-1764," is exciting in the scale,  quality and range of the artworks on display. This exhibition is more than an  unprecedented showing of art objects, or a survey of uncommon history. It  restores a balance to my recent misperceptions of Europe and its art legacy,  brings us to examine more closely Renaissance, Baroque, earlier perceptions of    Western and Eastern, and the show intrigues with its range of cross-cultural  interpretations and syntheses. An excellent and exhilarating example of the  latter is "Vessels From The Sultan Service" (Pre-1777). These are a  dish and plate from what was originally a set of 280 pieces executed at the    Royal Manufactory at Warsaw, Poland, I tend to forget how much East courses  within our notions of West, or European. This is especially evident in many of  these items from the Polish and Lithuanian Commonwealth. For an art viewer  familiar with Rembrandt's so-called "Polish Rider," or the seventeenth  century etchings of Stefano Della Bella on Polish subjects, "Land of The    Winged Horsemen" offers an opportunity to view at firsthand the reality  which served them as inspiration. I saw a true example of the harmonization of  diverse cultural streams into such portraiture as "Stanislaw Teczynski"  painted about 1630 with a distinct native fashion and attributed to Tommaso    Dolabella who was brought to Cracow by King Sigismund III. The exhibition  catalogue notes that the execution displays strong links with the Venetian and  even affinities with artistic developments in the Netherlands. Although the  fashion is very representative of a young Polish nobleman of the time. Equally  impressive is "Wincenty Aleksander Gosiewski" painted by Daniel    Schultz the Younger about 1650 or 1651. It is a portrait in battle dress, of a  noble who was to follow a highly eventful military career. Gosiewski's gaze  displays an almost royal passion, combining a lively elegance with an equal  measure of military viciousness. This exhibition, offers a concrete context for  so much of the European cultural legacy. What is important to note, is the broad  frequency of foreign artists encompassed in this exhibition. While domestic    Polish fine and decorative art, with noteworthy exceptions, was admirable, the    Commonwealth of Poland and Lithuania in this and earlier centuries was immense  and prosperous -- a major market for the arts and applied artistries. It thus  attracted and sustained artists and art contacts from all of the best European  and Eastern centers. Amazingly hand threaded persian rugs give you a different  perspective at every angle and the light amplifies the intricate silk  embroidery. They are indefinitely visual delights. One of the great virtues of  what is    
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